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Showing 76 to 90 of 287 results Save | Export
Duff, Jon M. – 1995
This paper discusses current changes in the teaching and learning of artistic rendering in light of technological advances that may cause teachers to rethink both what is taught, and the manner in which the results of the artistic process are valued and evaluated. The two methods of generating a photorealistic computer image are described,…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Expression, Computer Graphics, Graphic Arts
Shambaugh, R. Neal – 1995
The purpose of this paper is to examine the ways in which teachers and students can leverage the power and potential of visuals to encode information and experiences as personalized meanings, and to help people create their own timeless images as ways to understand the world. The foundation is laid for conducting research to test the assertion…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Encoding (Psychology), Imagery
Kerns, H. Dan; And Others – 1993
This paper describes a faculty resource team in the Bradley University (Illinois) Department of Industrial Engineering that works with student project teams in an effort to improve their visualization and oral presentation skills. Students use state of the art technology to develop and display their visuals. In addition to technology, students are…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Engineering Education, Higher Education, Speech Skills
Silverstein, Ora – 1993
This paper draws attention to the different applications of multimedia. There are various types of media technologies for communication and information. Museums use visuals which combine video, statues, and static pictures to produce a multimedia display. Multimedia applications are also present in education, more specifically in natural sciences.…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Media, Educational Technology, Hypermedia
Curtiss, Deborah – 1993
A visually literate person's lexicon for interpreting visual statements, without regard to medium, could include an eclectic array of possibilities. Some definitions and demonstrations of the various approaches are presented. The premodern, or connoisseur's approach, is characterized by a central concern with the assessment of quality, and such…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Definitions, Hermeneutics, Modernism
Castle, Marrietta Walden – 1986
Based on the notion that visual decisions play an important role in what children recognize and interpret in books and that teachers have a special responsibility to help students become visually literate, this article draws parallels between visual and verbal concepts and suggests some activities for teaching "picture reading" skills in the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Multisensory Learning, Pictorial Stimuli, Reader Text Relationship
Desmond, Kathleen Kadon; Koroscik, Judith Smith – 1984
The effect of verbal contextual information on junior high school students' categorization of differences among photographic art was examined. Photographs of varying levels of abstraction were presented to the viewers both with and without correct and erroneous titles that referred to descriptive or interpretive information. Twelve students…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Art Appreciation, Context Effect, Cues
Metallinos, Nikos – 1982
Research has shown that producers and consumers of television programs are still uncertain about the nature of the "grammar" or "lexicon" that makes up the language of television. Although attempts have been made in experimental television ("video art"), systematic studies on the idiosyncratic nature, unique features,…
Descriptors: Creative Art, Interpersonal Competence, Language Styles, Language Usage
Braden, Roberts A.; Walker, Alice D. – 1980
An historical review of definitions of visual literacy is summarized by the statement, "the transmission of meaning visually is what visual literacy is all about." To be visually literate is to be able to gain meaning from what we see and to be able to communicate meaning to others through the images we create. Three assumptions, taken from the…
Descriptors: Advertising, Comics (Publications), Communication Problems, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Brigham, Donald; Sullivan, Edward A. – 1980
The goals of the visual arts program of the Attleboro (MA) public schools, its relationship with the rest of the curriculum, and a study of the effectiveness of the program in seventh grade are described. It is suggested that the visual conceptual skills that are developed through the visual arts program are essential to cognitive processes and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comparative Testing, Concept Formation, Elementary Secondary Education
Routh, Robert D. – 1977
Image making, like writing and speaking, is a carrier of ideas. This paper presents photography as therapy, a useful concept for advocates of humanistic education. The paper shows that Western civilization, due to its preoccupation with science, technology, and commerce, enhances and promotes left-hemispheric brain functions (verbal, analytical,…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Educational Objectives, Humanistic Education, Humanization
Matthews, Barbara – 2001
This paper will explore aspects of past practice and belief and how relevant these are to the future. New Zealand Curriculum guidelines for English will be examined in relation to best practice. Oral and visual texts will be discussed, as will the blurring of the boundaries between written and visual text with examples from picture books and…
Descriptors: Censorship, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, English Curriculum
Appelman, Bob – 1996
In an instructional message the contextual dominance is most often conveyed in the form of printed or spoken sentences. Within any sentence used in conjunction with a picture are nouns or phrases that directly relate to contextual elements within the picture. These are called referents since they refer to objects perceptible in the picture. This…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Information Processing
Kokonis, Michael – 1993
This paper suggests ways in which video can be used in teaching college literature and cinema courses in order to promote audiovisual literacy. The method proposed presupposes an approach to narrative through narratology, the discipline that examines texts of narrative fiction as narratives, irrespective of their mode of manifestation (verbal,…
Descriptors: Courses, Educational Media, Film Criticism, Film Study
Moriarty, Sandra E.; Kenney, Keith – 1997
One of the most basic theoretical areas in the study of visual communication and visual literacy is the nature of representation. Some of the important research in this area is reviewed in this paper, and a model of representation is developed that satisfies many of the philosophical concerns. The paper begins with a discussion on the relationship…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Information Processing
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